Fri. Nov 18th, 2022

Indian billionaire Gautam Adanis dream run up the global wealth rankings is faltering after a media report raising questions about some offshore investors triggered a rout in his conglomerates six listed stocks.
The 58-year-old tycoon has lost more money this week through Thursday than anyone else in the world, with his personal fortune tumbling by about $13.2 billion to $63.5 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. Just days ago, he was closing the gap with Mukesh Ambani as Asias richest man. Adani group stocks fell further on Friday, with some dropping by their daily limit for a fifth straight session.
The U-turn in shares started Monday after the Economic Times reported that Indias national share depository froze the accounts of three Mauritius-based funds because of insufficient information on the owners. The bulk of the holdings of Albula Investment Fund, Cresta Fund and APMS Investment Fund — about $6 billion — are shares of Adanis firms.
Although the Adani group called the report blatantly erroneous and said it was done to deliberately mislead the investing community, investors concerned over transparency rushed for the exit.
The Mauritius offshore funds hold more than 90% of their assets under management in Adani group companies, according to Bloomberg Intelligence.
There should be greater clarity to ensure who the final owners of the shares are, said Hemindra Hazari, an independent research analyst in Mumbai.
A spokesperson for the Adani Group declined to comment beyond the exchange filings sent this week. These overseas funds have been investors in Adani Enterprises Ltd. for more than a decade, Adani Group said in a June 14 statement. We urge all our stakeholders not to be perturbed by market speculations.
In identical exchange filings the same day, Adani group companies said that they had written confirmation from the Registrar and Transfer Agent that the offshore funds demat accounts in which Adani shares were held are not frozen.
Albula and APMS, in separate statements dated June 14 emailed via their management company IQ EQ Fund Services (Mauritius) Ltd. on Thursday, said the funds are fully operational. Fact is that the relevant NSDL entry for APMS Investment Fund Ltd. shows a technical account level freeze only that has absolutely NO relevance to its normal FPI trading activities, APMS said. The funds didnt answer questions about why they hold such concentrated positions in Adani stock, nor did they share names of their investors.
Shares of Adani Green Energy Ltd., the moguls most valuable asset, slipped 12.4% this week as of 9:21 a.m. in Mumbai Friday. Adani Ports & Special Economic Zone Ltd. plunged 22%, Adani Power Ltd., Adani Total Gas Ltd. and Adani Transmission Ltd. tumbled at least 22%, while flagship Adani Enterprises fell more than 13%.
Excitement around the Adani empire spanning ports, mines and power plants had been building up over the past couple of years as the coal magnate looks beyond the dirtiest fossil fuel for expansion, seeking to dovetail his business interests with infrastructure priorities set by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
Big Push
Investors had sent some of the groups stocks soaring more than 500% since the start of 2020, betting the first-generation entrepreneurs big push into sectors such as renewable energy, airports, data centers and defense contracting will pay off. Earlier this month, Adanis wealth was close to $80 billion.
Adding to the tailwind was MSCI Inc.s decision to include more Adani stocks to its India benchmark index despite scant analyst coverage. Three of Adanis listed companies were included in May, taking the groups total to five. The inclusion also led to more mandated buying by investors that track the indexes.
The quick surge combined with equity largely held by overseas funds with very little public float is a risk for Adani shares, BI analysts wrote last week. This weeks events have also brought the opacity around the group and its key non-founder shareholders into focus.
I expect the speculative cycle in Adani Group company shares has probably reached its term, Travis Lundy, an analyst at Smartkarma wrote in a note.